• Adults Only Website 18+

    If you are under 18 you are not permitted to submit personal information to us or use this website. If discovered you will be banned.

    We will ban and report anyone posting illegal content.

    We will ban any forum user who breaks our terms.

    Freedom of speech should be wide open as long as it doesn't incite violence.

    We have a 15 year old thriving community here with 400,000+ members and hundreds of people online at any given moment, we encourage you to join!, there are 1000's of topics to discuss. Please be aware before registering and read our terms of service and privacy policy.

    By dismissing this notice and proceeding, you agree to the above.

How do you stay cool in the summer?

How to stay cool?

  • Central A/C

    Votes: 27 44.3%
  • Individual room A/C unit(s)

    Votes: 11 18.0%
  • Shitty fan(s)

    Votes: 12 19.7%
  • Nothing; I'm hot, sweaty & miserable

    Votes: 6 9.8%
  • Nothing; I don't need anything...I'm naturally cool

    Votes: 11 18.0%

  • Total voters
    61
It's schweddy balls season again , I'm going to let you fellas in on a little secret I swear by that will keep your sweaty balls and asshole to a minimum while at work,. .

Baby powder, it's a god send...

Here's some schweddy Weiner's for you ..


try gold bond bro.
Hate the heat as well. More so than most people, me thinks. I simply sweat and dream of a cool shower.
I stay out of the sun as much as possible. Air conditioning is a godsend.
im with ya dude. the humidity fucking killz me! and i work outside. i prefer winter,hands down! i hibernate on the weekends.
 
maybe you're dead 🤔
1657501823045.webp
 
I have central heating and air, but my house that was built in the '60s also has a whole house attic fan, and I have a large wood stove. Unless it gets above 90* outside, the attic fan os sufficient. The wood stove heats the whole house no problem, coldest outside temp sp far has been -10F. I know that's not very cold for my northern US or Canadian people here, but not running it hard I kept the whole house above 74F.
 
I have central heating and air, but my house that was built in the '60s also has a whole house attic fan, and I have a large wood stove. Unless it gets above 90* outside, the attic fan os sufficient. The wood stove heats the whole house no problem, coldest outside temp sp far has been -10F. I know that's not very cold for my northern US or Canadian people here, but not running it hard I kept the whole house above 74F.
It's similar in our house (but no air), we can still burn wood in the old big stove that was built with the house in the 1950s, it got replaced once by a new one in the '80. (We ruined the first by burning too much waste in it). Theoretically, you could change some things now, install a feeding system and burn these wood pellets.
Central heating comes from our electric power supplier in form of district heating, or teleheating. Don't know exactly in English.
Hot water is from an electric flow-type heater.
It's a good mixture.
 
It's similar in our house (but no air), we can still burn wood in the old big stove that was built with the house in the 1950s, it got replaced once by a new one in the '80. (We ruined the first by burning too much waste in it). Theoretically, you could change some things now, install a feeding system and burn these wood pellets.
Central heating comes from our electric power supplier in form of district heating, or teleheating. Don't know exactly in English.
Hot water is from an electric flow-type heater.
It's a good mixture.
I love my wood stove, it took me a while to find it, as I was searching for a very particular one and I'm picky about condition. I also have an abundance of free wood to burn, fewer and fewer people in my area are burning wood each year sadly. Whata kind of stove did you/do you have?

I found this 1979 Fisher Grandpa Bear for $500 from the original owner, they gave me the owners manual, two extra brand new damper knobs still in the boxes, the original fireplace screen that was never used, and two sets of fireplace tools. I installed a new 7 inch class A chimney and new flue pipe.
0711221913.jpg

Welcome to the corner of my basement.

Pellet stove are pretty popular nowadays and from what I hear, pretty dang efficient. I've been a wood burner since I was a kid, it's what I grew up with and I'll burn wood till I'm gone.
 
I love my wood stove, it took me a while to find it, as I was searching for a very particular one and I'm picky about condition. I also have an abundance of free wood to burn, fewer and fewer people in my area are burning wood each year sadly. Whata kind of stove did you/do you have?

I found this 1979 Fisher Grandpa Bear for $500 from the original owner, they gave me the owners manual, two extra brand new damper knobs still in the boxes, the original fireplace screen that was never used, and two sets of fireplace tools. I installed a new 7 inch class A chimney and new flue pipe.
View attachment 599393
Welcome to the corner of my basement.

Pellet stove are pretty popular nowadays and from what I hear, pretty dang efficient. I've been a wood burner since I was a kid, it's what I grew up with and I'll burn wood till I'm gone.
That's a beautiful piece.
Our stove was built-in/integrated with the house and has warm air channels in every room. In the kitchen there are service openings; it's like a kind of central heating. Originally meant for burning coal products. Black coal nuts or for low heat, brown coal briquettes.
Don't know the name, the service guy did offer us the stove when we needed a new one. Nothing special, I think.

In the next days, they expect a 'heat wave' up to 37°C/98 F. But for only one/two days? Strange prediction.

Unbenannt.JPG


Maybe I should try to befriend a neighbour here, they really built a swimming pool last year. And a wall made of false stones to hide it.
Meh.. better not.
 
That's a beautiful piece.
Our stove was built-in/integrated with the house and has warm air channels in every room. In the kitchen there are service openings; it's like a kind of central heating. Originally meant for burning coal products. Black coal nuts or for low heat, brown coal briquettes.
Don't know the name, the service guy did offer us the stove when we needed a new one. Nothing special, I think.

In the next days, they expect a 'heat wave' up to 37°C/98 F. But for only one/two days? Strange prediction.

View attachment 599534

Maybe I should try to befriend a neighbour here, they really built a swimming pool last year. And a wall made of false stones to hide it.
Meh.. better not.
Thanks. That coal stove sounds intriguing, did it pump a lot of heat?

98F is pretty standard fare where I'm at in the Southern US, and when it gets that hot, I close the windows and run A/C, but in the evenings and overnight/thru the early morning the attic fan with open windows is awesome.

I have a pool as well, it's magnificent on hot, humid days. Befriending your neighbors isn't too bad of an idea, especially with the food shortages and global economic collapse that are coming, we are only at the very begining of it right now.
 
Back
Top